Abstract

FnCel5A from Fervidobacterium nodosum is one of the most thermostable endoglucanases that have phenomenal characteristics, such as high activity, pH stability, and multi-specificity towards various substrates. However, large-scale thermophilic enzyme production is still a challenge. Herein, we focus on an optimization approach based on response surface methodology to improve the production of this enzyme. First, a Box-Behnken design was used to examine physiochemical parameters such as induction temperatures, isopropylβ-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside concentrations and induction times on the heterogeneous expression of FnCel5A gene in E. coli. The best culture was collected after adding 0.56 mM IPTG and incubating it for 29.5 h at 24°C. The highest enzymatic activity observed was 3.31 IU/mL. Second, an economical "thermolysis" cell lysis method for the liberation of the enzymes was also optimized using Box-Behnken design. The optimal levels of the variables were temperature 77°C, pH 7.71, and incubation time of 20 min, which gave about 74.3% higher activity than the well-established bead-milling cell disruption method. The maximum productivity of FnCel5A achieved (5772 IU/L) illustrated that its production increased significantly after combining both optimal models. This strategy can be scaled-up readily for overproduction of FnCel5A from recombinant E.coli to facilitate its usage in biomass energy production.

Highlights

  • The enzymatic conversion of plant biomass into fuels has sparked a keen interest in their potential for solving problems related to climate change, energy security, and global economic development

  • This study provides appropriate and optimized modules for the efficient production of thermophilic cellulases, which will contribute to the production of biofuels at the industrial level

  • E. coli (BL21) for gene cloning and recombinant enzyme production was routinely cultured at 37 ̊C in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium

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Summary

Introduction

The enzymatic conversion of plant biomass into fuels has sparked a keen interest in their potential for solving problems related to climate change, energy security, and global economic development. The development of fossil fuel to a biomass-based economy is not possible for a number of reasons [1]. The production of biochemical and bioethanol products poses technical and financial problems due to the complex nature of lignocellulose. Improvements in treatment efficiency and financing are required to make these alternative fuels economically viable [2].

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